2014's Worst 'Currency' is Bitcoin; Its Best Surprises

I've been following currency gyrations in 2014 with great interest since their movements do correlate with internal and external disturbances related to wider economic phenomena and geopolitical events. To no one's surprise, Russia's ruble and Ukraine's hryvnia have followed each other to near-oblivion. A while ago, I also explained why I believed Bitcoin was a dud while Apple Pay held out much more hope for becoming a "mainstream" form of money. Oh, if only I had tracked it more closely.

The digital currency peaked at a value of $1,130 just over a year ago.
Its plunge of more than 56 percent in 2014 makes it the world's worst
performing currency this year, according to Bloomberg, which tracks 175
foreign-exchange values...

At a current value of about $326, Bitcoin isn't dead, yet it may be
mortally wounded. The Dec. 20 sentencing of Charlie Shrem, one of the
digital currency's most vocal cheerleaders as vice-chairman of the
Bitcoin Foundation and chief executive of an exchange called BitInstant,
to two years in prison for illegal money transfers doesn't help.

While innovation should always be encouraged, Bitcoin isn't yet fit
as a place for orphans and widows to shelter their nest eggs -- although
there are admittedly plenty of gold bugs who would say the same about
fiat currencies.

I hope to explore some of the reasons why I believe that Bitcoin is another victim of (likely short-lived) dollar strength, but that's a topic for another post. Anyway, let's try to forget about the Eastern European mess and focus on the magic of Christmas since others' currencies have done rather better. Do you believe in magic? The world's best-performing currency of 2014 is, of all things, the Somali shilling:

Here’s a pecuniary peculiarity to rival Bitcoin – the world strongest
currency over the past 12 months belongs to a small, war-torn African
state without foreign currency reserves or any discernible monetary
policy and a central bank of only three years’ standing.
Yet the Somali shilling, Somalia’s official currency, has overcome
such disadvantages to appreciate against the US dollar by just under 60
per cent since March last year, becoming the strongest among global 175
currencies tracked by Bloomberg. Its surge has been so pronounced that
the second most robust currency over the same period – the Icelandic
Krona – could only manage a measly 10.2 per cent rise.

The key chart is above even if it's a bit dated. Note that its direction is opposite to the one above since it's expressed in USD/SOS terms. That is, a falling exchange rate means a strengthening Somali shilling. It all reminds us that issuing fiat currency is a confidence game--one that Somalia is winning against all odds as it regains a very slight semblance of normalcy (i.e., statehood) while such normalcy flees from Russia and Ukraine:

The key lesson, though, is that money remains at heart a confidence
trick. Minor things, like being backed by a country or countries, being
minted by a government, and having a physical form you can put in your
pocket, still matter. All of which could come into sharp focus the day
hackers reduce our checking-account balances to zero, the financial
system crashes into chaos and the fragility of the world's banking
infrastructure is laid bare for all to see. Let's hope 2015 isn't the
year when we find out that zeroes and ones in a computer aren't really
money.

In a few more hours, Christians will celebrate the birth of the savior. Make no mistake: there is a long list of developing world currencies that need "saving" in the coming year.Former Soviet bloc nations have it especially bad so those Orthodox churches should be packing 'em in the pews with those wishing for divine (currency) intervention.